Saturday, January 10, 2009

There exists, in the public record, two documents

One is an (APS) police report. On its bottom it reads in effect;
this is a sworn document, you lie under penalty of perjury.

The other, is a page of the transcript of my arbitration hearing
before former New Mexico State Supreme Court Chief Justice
William Riordan link.

The transcript is of testimony given under oath,
again subject to the penalty of perjury.

The incident report and transcript are the testimony of then
APS Director of Risk Management, Richard Cangiolosi.

The sworn statements are contradictory.

In truth, neither is the truth,
which has been and can be verified again by polygraph.

Even if one were the truth, the other is not.
Except perhaps under the rules of Juris Mustelidae;
legal weaselry.

If these are not together, incontrovertible evidence of felony
criminal perjury, what is?

I was paid a few tens of thousands of dollars, gross,
in part, to promise that I would never hand those two
documents to any agency of law enforcement.

Tax dollars were used to buy exception to the law, for a senior
APS administrator
for felony criminal misconduct.

Paid for, with unwitting taxpayer support of "education".

As is being done right now with respect to the public corruption
and criminal criminal conspiracy in the APS Police Department.
circa late 2006, early 2007.

Two years later, and weeks from the expiration of statutes of
limitation,

taxpayers are paying lawyers,

who work for Paula Maes husband's law firm,

to hide the Access Investigation report from public
knowledge and criminal prosecution.

Taxpayers are paying to hide felony criminal misconduct
involving senior APS administrators.
Journalink and
link to "private investigations", and
DA Brandenburg /Access Investigations link.

DA Brandenburg and APS Custodian of Public Records,
Rigo Chavez are on the record offering contradictory versions
of the supposed public record.

Brandenburg claimed that the reason she has never closed the case because it was growing increasingly more complicated and requiring much more investigation; (on her KKOB radio talk show.)

Yet, a public records request for any document that showed even one "billable hour" of actual investigation was ignored.

Rigo Chavez is on record admitting that after two years, and within weeks of the expiration of criminal statutes of limitation, that he cannot a produce a public record of any transfer of evidence at all. He admits that nothing has been sent because the investigation is "still underway".

Tax payers will pay lawyers to continue hide the evidence until after a few of the good ol' boys have cashed in their get of of jail free cards.


And, I am told that there is less problem with using tax dollars
to buy exception to the law for good ol' boys,

than there is a problem with my taking those dollars.

I am told that I should not have accepted their offer;
it's all my fault.

Honorable people can be coerced into apparently dishonorable conduct. Who of us can judge whether another man suffered enough, before giving finally giving in?

However grievous my misconduct,
it is not so grievous as allowing the same thing to happen
ever again.

... much less again, and again, and again.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Check this out - very much like the Maes - Modrall illegal procurement situation facing APS.

----------------

Friday, January 9, 2009, 12:14pm EST
Former Commissioner McCarty faces fraud charges
South Florida Business Journal

Former Palm Beach County Commissioner Mary McCarty was charged Friday with mail and wire fraud conspiracy as part of a federal corruption investigation.

McCarty, the fifth Palm Beach County politician to face jail time in recent years, earlier this week confessed to accepting free or discounted stays at resort hotels. She also admitted to taking part in county decisions that benefited her and her husband, a former South Florida water manager.

Her husband, Kevin McCarty, also has been charged for allegedly not reporting her crimes. He could face up to three years in prison she could face up to five years.

From 1998 to 2000, Mary McCarty voted to approve Raymond James as the underwriter of 11 bond issues, totaling $150 million, while her husband worked for the firm, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida said.

Investigators said McCarty started abstaining from votes involving Raymond James in 2001 to avoid disclosing the financial interest she and her husband had.

In 2002, Kevin McCarty left to work for Bear Stearns, another bond underwriter, and told his new bosses that he was "highly confident" he could get Palm Beach County School Board business – even though Bear Stearns had lost out to Raymond James earlier, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

The office then outlines how the two firms ultimately split business involving the county and school board.

Raymond James resigned the school board account in May 2002, and the board transferred underwriting to Bear Stearns, the U.S. Attorney's Office stated. Bear Stearns underwrote a $93 million bond.

A Raymond James official told his supervisor later on that he would be meeting with McCarty at Bear Stearns to discuss Raymond James becoming one of the county commission's bond underwriters, the U.S. Attorney's office states.

In December, Mary McCarty named Raymond James as a county bond underwriter without disclosing her husband's interest in the appointment, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

Raymond James subsequently received more than $282.45 million in underwriting business from the county commission, while Bear Stearns received $506.71 million, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

The U.S. Attorney's Office also said Mary McCarty failed to disclose gifts and gratuities, such as free lodging or heavily discounted room rates at Sunset Key Guest Cottages in Key West and other properties owned by Ocean Properties.

The office outlined a similar pattern involving bond issues for the city of Delray Beach.

In her resignation letter to fellow Commissioner Jeff Koons, McCarty said that, at the time, she “rationalized” her actions and didn’t see any ethical dilemma.

In retrospect, she realized what she did was wrong, McCarty wrote in her resignation.

"What disheartens me, perhaps as much as the shame I have brought down upon myself, is the continuation of scrutiny that I have brought to the Palm Beach County Commission.”

Attorney Richard Lubin of Lubin and Metz in West Palm Beach is reportedly representing Kevin McCarty, but was in a meeting and could not immediately be reached for comment.

Attorney J. David Bogenschutz of Bogenschutz & Dutko in Fort Lauderdale is representing Mary McCarty, but attended a hearing in Tampa Friday morning and could not immediately be reached for comment

Anonymous said...

More on the dynamic that is used by "alleged" school district mobs, well written, your blog post I mean. We sat over lunch a few years ago, and I told you how Bruce Smith said one thing to police and another thing the kangaroo school board Danny Moon used to fire me. A mirror image with different people in the role of me an you, and the people who lied about us to try and make our testimony about them seem less than reliable.

When you point out the discrepancy, the fact that one of the contradictory things must be lies, if not both, and the truth is somewhere else altogether, you either get blank stares or knowing ones.

Some ostriches in governement just pretend you never told them anything, and keep on eating the bird seed they are given by their masters. And some, they are in on the graft and try to bring you down with lies that get more and more outrageous by the second. Until they are caught, or not.

If you can't afford a lawyer, you don't get justice in this here country. Lucky for us, there are lawyers who are elected and want to keep getting elected, who are paid to care about this type of thing. If you can just get them to hear above the din, you can get a lawyer who is payed for by the government to finally make them stop stealing.